On the Optimal Tariff and the Law of Demand

Author’s Note: This post originally appeared on my (now defunct) personal website as a blog post on January 23, 2019.  Since I took down my website, I have had several requests for this post.  Econlib has been kind enough to allow me to repost it here.  I have made minor modifications for grammar and style, but otherwise the post remains identical.  The original version is available through the Wayback Machine here.

 

In his 1987 Economic Review article detailing the history of optimal tariffs, Thomas Humphrey writes:

[The optimal tariff model] assumes unrealistically (1) that foreign countries will not retaliate with tariffs of their own, (2) that elasticities of supply and demand in foreign trade are not so large in the long run as to render the tariff ineffective, (3) that the optimum tariff rate can be precisely identified and skillfully administered, and (4) that politicians can resist pressures to raise tariff rates above the optimum level.

All four of these objections of the optimal tariff model are difficult to overcome when addressing the model as a policy procedure.  I have written on some of these other points before (as have many people far smarter than I).  However, I want to focus on point #2 and I’ll try to keep this not wonky.

That the optimal tariff model depends on elasticities of supply and demand is not controversial.  Indeed, that is how the calculation of the tariff works.  However, given condition (2) above, we can see the optimal tariff is, at best, a short-run policy.  This follows from the Law of Demand.

Most people tend to think of the Law of Demand in its common form: all else held equal, an increase in the price of a good will reduce the quantity demanded of that good.  But there is a second Law of Demand: the longer a price remains relatively high, the more elastic the demand for a good becomes.  

Given that the goal of a tariff is to increase the relative price of a good, then as long as the tariff remains in place, the more elastic demand for that good becomes.  Indeed, if the tariff remains in place and, again, everything else held equal, over enough time, the tariff could cause the demand curve for a good to become perfectly elastic.  A perfectly elastic demand curve would indicate no consumer welfare gains from the trade.  The elimination of consumer welfare would then mean that the tariff is a net welfare loss for the country in question.  So, an optimal tariff cannot persist in the long run, only in the short run given the Second Law of Demand.  

Some might object by saying: “But wait, Jon, you sly and handsome devil!  That would just mean the optimal tariff would need to be reduced.  There’s no reason to think the tariff would eventually become a net welfare loss.” 

Indeed, it may very well be that some benevolent government can milk the tariff for everything it’s worth by constantly adjusting the optimal tariff as the elasticities change.  However, this is where public choice comes into play.  As Gordon Tullock discussed in 1975, government support of firms is very difficult to remove.  Domestic producers have capitalized on the gains the tariff has provided them.  To remove the tariff is not to eat up “extra normal” profit for monopolizing firms, but rather to eat into normal profit for them.  These firms are legitimately harmed, profit-wise, by the removal or alternations of these protections like an optimal tariff.  Any adjustment to an optimal tariff, even if demanded by the economic scenario is likely to be fought tooth-and-nail by affected firms.  The resulting stagnation will likely result in an optimal tariff that is too high!  Any short-run gains from the optimal tariff (assuming all the above conditions are met) would likely be eaten up by this un-optimal tariff that results from the changing elasticity and lack of change in the statutory tariff.  

In a general-equilibrium theoretical framework, an optimal tariff makes perfect sense.  But, once time and public choice enters the fray, the reasonableness of an optimal tariff goes out the window.  And, as GMU economist Garett Jones likes to say: in a knockdown fight between general equilibrium and public choice, public choice wins every time.

 


Jon Murphy is an assistant professor of economics at Nicholls State University.

READER COMMENTS

nobody.really
Aug 2 2024 at 1:34pm

1: But Jon, you sly and handsome devil, what conclusions can we draw about Reagan’s import quotas on Japanese cars? They existed for four years and then ended. Protectionism needn’t last forever.

2: Conceptually, could we draft a tariff to build in a regular (annual? monthly? daily?) adjustment mechanism reflect changes in elasticities of demand?

Jon Murphy
Aug 2 2024 at 1:45pm

To your first, no.  They existed for 13 years (1981 to 1994).  They were originally supposed to last only for 3, but domestic pressure kept them in.

(It’s worth noting a VER is not an optimal tariff, nor are optimal tariffs protectionist, so this point about VERs is ultimately irrelevant to the point of this blog).

To your second: conceptually, yes.  Realistically, no.  I address that point in this post (2nd to last paragraph).  Also, now you’d need to consider increasing administrative costs.

nobody.really
Aug 2 2024 at 2:49pm

So you dispute the merits of an import quota. You dispute the practicality of creating tariffs with automatic adjustment mechanisms. But not a word of dispute about being a sly and handsome devil.

Hm.

MarkW
Aug 3 2024 at 6:48am

The auto tariffs drove the creation of foreign auto plants (non-UAW plants in right-to-work states) to the point where the import quotas became irrelevant.  And the <a href=”https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicken_tax”>Chicken Tax</a>, which has prevented Americans from buying smaller, less expensive imported trucks, is apparently immortal.

nobody.really
Aug 3 2024 at 6:33pm

I had never heard of this tariff. (Not surprising that I hadn’t hear of it, perhaps; but it’s a suprising story.)

This blog is endlessly educational. Score one for MarkW.

Andujar Cedeno
Aug 3 2024 at 10:13pm

The consequences of a targeted tariff on China goes largely unexamined. If a product exported from China gets tariffed then manufacture of the product will leave China proportional to the amount of exports to the country imposing the tariffs. The reduction in Chinese production will get offset by production outside China. The target of the tariff is China and not the good itself.

Jon Murphy
Aug 3 2024 at 10:43pm

The consequences of a targeted tariff on China goes largely unexamined.

Correct. That’s because this post is not about China at all. It’s a theoretical point about optimal tariffs.

Matthias
Aug 4 2024 at 4:10am

Could someone explain the point about perfect elasticity of demand versus consumer surplus to me?

As an example, suppose the market supplies red and blue shoes.  Both of them are (almost) perfect substitutes.

The demand for any single colour of shoes is perfectly elastic, I guess, because people will immediately substitute to eg blue shoes when the price of blue shoes goes up even a tiny bit. And vice versa.

A tariff on blue shoes only or on red shoes only wouldn’t make much of a difference. But we can’t conclude that a tariff on shoes in general would be fine, or that there’s not customer surplus in shoes.

Jon Murphy
Aug 4 2024 at 6:40am

But we can’t conclude that a tariff on shoes in general would be fine

Correct. With a perfectly elastic demand curve, a tariff of any size would not be fine.

or that there’s not customer surplus in shoes.

Consumer surplus is defined as the difference between the price the consumer is willing to pay for the marginal unit (the demand curve) and the price they do pay (market price). In the supply and demand model, the market price and demand curve are one and the same when the demand curve is perfectly elastic. Thus no consumer surplus.

Comments are closed.

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